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  1. An Interview with Jack Hill Wheeler Winston Dixon As his web site notes , " legendary cult-film director, grunge auteur, notorious - these are some of the phrases used recently to describe writer-director Jack Hill. He has also been referred to as the man who initiated the women-in-prison genre of the seventies , and

  2. Writer/director Jack Hill's name will forever be associated with films that feature strong, ethnically diverse and sexually liberated women in leading roles. Though his directorial debut came in 1964 with the campy horror classic Spider Baby (released in 1968) Hill made his mark with two women-in-prison films; 1971's The Big Doll House which he also produced, and 1972's The Big Bird Cage which he wrote and directed.

  3. Jack Hill. Director; Screenwriter; Editor “I liked the Warner Bros. movies of the forties. That’s my main influence. The noirs and the gangster films.” ...

  4. Nov 2, 2014 · Born in 1933, Jack Hill studied filmmaking at UCLA alongside his close friend Francis Ford Coppola and the two even worked on each other’s student features. Interestingly, Hill’s effort – dubbed The Host – would end up being recycled by Coppola as the third and final act in the iconic Apocalypse Now (1979).

  5. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › CoffyCoffy - Wikipedia

    Coffy is a 1973 American blaxploitation action film written and directed by Jack Hill.The story is about a black female vigilante played by Pam Grier who seeks violent revenge against a heroin dealer responsible for her sister's addiction.

  6. Jack Hill (September 12, 1887 – November 22, 1963) was an American actor, who appeared in scores of Laurel & Hardy comedies. Selected filmography [ edit ] A Quiet Street (1922, Short) - Red Mike (uncredited)

  7. Like his fellow UCLA classmate Francis Ford Coppola, Jack Hill got his start in the film industry at American International Pictures under the eye of Roger Corman ...